Initialing of a power-purchase
agreement late this month is expected to open the way to construction
of Iceland's biggest-ever industrial project. To attract an
energy-intensive aluminum plant, the island's state power
company plans to invest over $1 billion on a major hydroelectric
complex, flooding nearly 60 sq kilometers of arctic highland
wilderness.
Large rockfill dams in glacial
rivers north of Vatnajökull, Europe's largest glacier,
will impound 57-sq-km Hálslón Reservoir. Water
will flow through 40 km of tunnel to a 630-Mw powerhouse.
Over 50 km of transmission lines will carry electricity to
the proposed smelter at Reydarfjordur, on the east coast.
The PPA between utility Landsvirkjun
and Pittsburgh-based Alcoa Inc. will be followed by a review
of next month's hydro construction bids. A deal could be struck
this February, triggering 41/2 years of construction, says Thorsteinn
Hilmarsson, the utility's spokesman. Click
here to view map
Such an outcome would disappoint
an alliance of environmental groups bent on stopping the scheme.
"It's a beautiful, intact wilderness area....We want to have
a national park in this area," says arch-opponent Arni Finnsson,
chairman of the Iceland Nature Conservation Association, Reykjavík.
Critics complain that the reservoir
will submerge parts of the scenic Dimmugljúfur (Dark)
Canyon, flooding land used by pink-footed geese and reindeer.
Scarce mountain vegetation will be lost and the risk of soil
erosion will increase, they add. Landsvirkjun says its impact
mitigation efforts have satisfied the environment ministry
and the national parliament, which approved the work early
this year.
Officials say disturbing nearly
15% of the eastern 6,200-sq-km wilderness is a fair price
for the economic gain of a 295,000-tonne-per-year smelter.
The government has sought for decades to develop industries
to reduce the island's dependence on fisheries.
The main Scandinavian contractors
plus firms from Italy, Germany and the U.K. are among four
groups due to bid for the dam construction. The same groups,
joined by a French contractor, are competing for the tunnel
work.
A 190-m-high, 750-m-long rockfill
dam on the Jökulsá á Dal River at Mount
Fremri Kárahnjúkur is the project's centerpiece.
Two saddle dams, 60 m and 25 m high, will be built nearby
to seal smaller outlets, creating the 57-sq-km Hálslón
Reservoir, which will extend 27 km.
Some 20 km southeast of Kárahnjúkar
Dam, the 32-m-high, 675-m-long Ufsar Dam on the Jökulsá
í Fljótsda River will form the 1-sq-km Ufsarlón
Reservoir, which will regulate flows from Hálslón.
From the Hálslón
Reservoir, a 40-km-long, 7-m-dia headrace tunnel will feed
penstocks at the Teigsbjarg escarpment. A second 13-km-long
tunnel from the smaller Ufsarlón Reservoir will join
the headrace to regulate its flows. At the escarpment, two
410-m-long vertical penstocks will deliver water to the underground
powerhouse set some 600 m below main reservoir level.
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